
Weekly insights to help you excel and thrive in Canada 🇨🇦
Hey guys,
Canada just dropped its second-largest deficit in history—$78.3 billion—and whether you're planning to buy a house, switch careers, or just trying to figure out if this helps or hurts you, here's what you actually need to know.
The TL;DR:
This budget is a bit underwhelming given the hype, but still does a lot of good things Canada should have done years ago. BUT we did put a list of exciting initiatives we personally will be keeping an eye on 🥽
The money breakdown:
$332 billion in spending over 5 years
Housing: $25B
Defence: $82B (yes, really)
Infrastructure: $115B
Productivity: $110B
🎯 What This Means For Normal People
Already in effect:
Middle-class tax cut: Up to $840/year for two-income families (22 million Canadians)
Gas: now ~18¢/liter cheaper (carbon tax eliminated)
First-time homebuyer GST elimination: Save up to $50,000 on new homes under $1M (started May 27)
The housing reality check: Yes, $50K saved on GST sounds great. But this only applies to NEW builds that started construction after May 27, 2025. Not resale homes. And Desjardins warns developers might just raise prices, absorbing some of your savings.
Long-term housing affordability depends on nearly doubling annual construction from 280,000 to 430,000-480,000 homes. That's a 5-10 year timeline—not a 2026 fix.
What This Means For Your Career
High-growth sectors are getting government backing:
Skilled trades (decades of infrastructure work ahead)
Defence contractors (unprecedented $82B spend)
Critical minerals (lithium, cobalt, rare earths)
AI and tech (R&D credits doubled to $6M)
Infrastructure project management
Not so lucky:
Federal public service is cutting 40,000 jobs (10% workforce reduction)
Companies focused solely on U.S. exports without adaptation plans
Industries not investing in AI/upskilling
Youth focus: 175,000 employment placements in 2026-27 (that’s 2-3x the usual amount) through programs like Canada Summer Jobs and others.
What about Immigration?
Temporary resident admissions drop 43% — from 673,650 to 385,000 in 2026.
What this means:
Potentially less competition for housing and jobs
Likely wage increases (fewer workers = higher pay)
But also labour shortages in retail, food service, construction, hospitality
One-time fast-track: 33,000 work permit holders to permanent residency (2026-27 is your window if this is you)
H1B Visa holders get a fast track to a Canadian Work Permit
So is it transformational?
If it’s successful (by 2028): Housing becomes affordable, wages outpace inflation, Canada reduces U.S. trade dependency, you have more career opportunities in growing sectors. Canada is finally becoming an AI superpower.
Failure scenario: Housing stays unaffordable, debt mounts without growth, brain drain intensifies, we're still highly dependent on U.S. exports.
We'll know which way this goes by 2027-28 when housing construction trends, private sector investment patterns, and trade diversification efforts become measurable. We will also be watching closely how fast the Major Projects Office approves and moves along the mega-projects and green-lights new ones.
What We’re Personally Excited About
The AI and R&D investment alignment. Canada invented modern AI but hemorrhaged talent to Silicon Valley. Doubling the SR&ED tax credit to $6M and investing $925M in AI infrastructure isn't transformational yet, but it's the first serious signal that Canada wants to capture economic value from the research we pioneered. For anyone building skills in AI, data science, or machine learning—this creates actual domestic opportunities instead of forcing you to move south.
Canada Strong Pass is back. Free national park access, free museums, discounted Via Rail and ferry travel. This isn't just about affordability—it's about actually being able to afford to explore your own country. Small investment, massive cultural impact.
Banking fees are finally getting reviewed. Canada's banking fees are ridiculous compared to other countries. The government is examining Interac e-Transfer fees, ATM fees, and potential Bank Act amendments. Plus they're implementing open banking, which means you'll finally be able to share your financial data between institutions securely. This is huge for competition—when you can easily move your banking history to a competitor, banks actually have to compete for your business.
Telecom competition measures. Canada has some of the highest mobile and internet costs in the developed world. Any movement toward real competition means significant monthly savings. They're reviewing pricing practices and reducing barriers to entry. Not transformational yet, but the fact it's in the budget at all is progress.
The $1B research talent investment over 13 years to attract 1,000+ qualified researchers in natural sciences, engineering, health research, and social sciences. Canada invented modern AI and then watched our talent leave for Silicon Valley. This investment—combined with the $133.6M for doctoral and post-doctoral support—signals we're serious about retaining the people who create the next generation of breakthrough technologies. If you're building a career in research or want to work with cutting-edge talent, this matters.
Conclusion
If you're on an H-1B visa in the U.S.: Canada is fast-tracking work permits specifically for healthcare professionals, research scientists, and tech workers. This is your advantaged pathway while U.S. immigration policy remains uncertain.
If you're targeting permanent residency: 2026-27 is the sweet spot for work permit holders to transition to PR (33,000 fast-track spots). Get your work permit now, establish yourself, then leverage the one-time fast-track window.
Focus on high-demand sectors: Defence contractors, infrastructure project management, skilled trades, AI/tech, critical minerals. These sectors are getting billions in backing and will need talent. Don't target federal public service (cutting 40,000 jobs).
Be realistic about timelines: Don't expect housing affordability to be solved quickly. Real supply scaling (280K to 430K-480K homes annually) takes 5-10 years. If you're counting on prices dropping dramatically in 2026, adjust expectations.
Upskilling pathways: Enhanced R&D tax credits mean companies have more budget for training. If your employer offers AI/data science/technical training, take it. If they don't, that's a red flag about their competitiveness.
Timeline for career moves: If you're considering a sector shift, 2025-2026 is your window. By 2027-28, we'll know which sectors are actually growing versus which were just promises. Early movers capture the opportunities.
Read the full 22-minute deep dive with all the details, economist perspectives, and sector-by-sector breakdowns here: [Full article]
Some sectors are getting billions in backing (defence, infrastructure, AI), others are shrinking (federal public service, U.S.-only exporters). Positioning yourself strategically matters more than ever.
Join our next Boost cohort on Tuesday, Nov 11 — a 6-day career sprint to target government-backed sectors, translate your experience to high-demand opportunities, and build a résumé that actually gets you interviews (with a salary bump).
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